The smell of liniment will pervade Traeger Park on Sunday, heralding the start of the 2003 Aussie Rules season in Alice Springs. |
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In the past, I stared with amazement and almost revered the brown, smelly liniment as I rubbed it into my bruises. |
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If you experience such a symptom, there is no point in ignoring it or rubbing liniment in the belief that it is a muscle pain. |
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Oil of wintergreen, also known as methyl salicylate, is a time-honored rub or liniment used for sprains, strains, aches, pains and arthritis. |
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For treating traumatic bruises and injuries, it is combined with other herbs in a liniment, and also taken internally. |
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As Labour MPs rub liniment on their bruises after last week's anti-terror vote, here's a reminder that modern whips are mere pussycats. |
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His mother's liniment was prime stuff, and allowed him to move the limb often enough to keep the kinks worked out. |
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He may now be saying he wants to spend more time with his young son, but come next season the sniff of liniment might become something he can't refuse. |
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An endermic liniment composition which contains 3-methyl-3-methoxybutanol and 1,2-pentanediol. |
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Liquid oil was first used as a medicine by the ancient Egyptians, presumably as a wound dressing, liniment, and laxative. |
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He heard bitter, almost crazed, laughter before unseen hands rubbed excrement into his face and liniment around his genitals. |
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The fragrant liniment witch hazel is made from the dried leaves and sometimes from the twigs and bark. |
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He had a clean smell to him, starchy with a touch of liniment, and a closeted mustiness I notice now on my own clothes. |
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The only things he had available to him at that time were aspirin and horse liniment. |
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An endermic liniment comprising a member selected from the group consisting of Cyperas spacelatus Rottb. |
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The afternoon quickly dissolved, and after putting on blankets, applying liniment and leg wraps, helping bed stalls, and cleaning up the barn, it was dark. |
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An excellent liniment for bruises, aches and sprains is made from a combination of myrrh, golden seal and cayenne, macerated in rubbing alcohol for about two weeks. |
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It is a cooling liniment, therefore safe to use under magnets. |
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Pliny, a Roman scholar of the 1st century ce, wrote that lead could be used for the removal of scars, as a liniment, or as an ingredient in plasters for ulcers and the eyes, among other health applications. |
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Externally it is a very beneficial treatment for a variety of skin complaints, wounds, sores, burns, boils etc and is used in the form of liniment plasters, poultices, herbal steam baths and inhalers. |
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Carter's Little Liver Pills, Beecham's Pills, Scott's emulsion, Sloan's Liniment, Aspro, Zambuk, Iron Jelloids, Bile Beans, Parrish's Food, and Virol. |
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